238 S.W. 293 | Tex. App. | 1921
The appellee, M. H. Kennady, sued appellant, J. Burris Mitchell, in the Sixty-Seventh district court of Tarrant county to recover upon an alleged contract to pay commissions. The plaintiff, as Kennady will hereinafter be referred to, alleged, in substance, that in January, 1919, he had been employed by 131. F. Ritchey and G. R. Ritchey, brothers, to secure for them a "drilling contract" on 220 acres of land situated in Stephens county; that it was understood that the Ritcheys were not to pay any commission, but that the plaintiff was to secure commission for his services in the matter from the purchaser or contractor; that, pursuant to such employment and understanding, the plaintiff in fact secured one E. W. Nye, who undertook to secure said drilling contract, and agreed to pay the plaintiff $7.50 per acre for such part of the land as he (Nye) should secure from the Ritcheys. It was further alleged that Nye failed to secure the drilling contract, but that he went to the defendant Mitchell, and took him to the Ritcheys, from whom he secured a drilling contract on 200 acres of the land. It was further alleged that at the time the Ritcheys awarded the drilling contract to the defendant Mitchell, upon the insistence of the Ritcheys, the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff the commission that Nye had agreed to pay. It was alleged that the Ritcheys were acting as the agent of the plaintiff in thus securing his commission, for the recovery of which he prayed in the sum of $1,500.
The case was submitted upon the following special issue: *294
"At the time of or before the time of the execution of the drilling contract between the Ritcheys and the defendant, J. Burris Mitchell, did the defendant, J. Burris Mitchell, agree to pay to M. H. Kennady the commission of $1,500?"
This issue was answered by the jury in the affirmative, and no objection has been made to the form of its submission, nor has any attack been made upon the answer of the jury as unsupported by the evidence.
The questions involved have been presented by assignments of error to the action of the court in overruling the general demurrer to the petition, in refusing certain special charges, to the introduction of certain testimony, to the refusal to give peremptory charges, etc. It is insisted that the petition and evidence show that the plaintiff's cause of action is predicated upon another contract which failed; that the contract, as alleged and proven, is in violation of the statute of frauds; that it appears not to have been included in the written contract between the Ritcheys and defendant, Mitchell; that the evidence shows that, at the time of the undertaking of the defendant to pay the commission, if any, no amount was agreed upon, and that therefore the contract must fail for want of certainty.
We think we must rule against appellant upon all of these contentions. In Nugent v. Wolfe,
"When the leading object of the promise or agreement is to become guarantor or surety to the promisee, for a debt for which a third party is and continues to be primarily liable, the agreement, whether made before or after, or at the time with the promise of the principal, is within the statute, and not binding unless evidenced by writing. On the other hand, when the leading object of the promisor is to subserve some interest or purpose of his own, notwithstanding the effect is to pay or discharge the debt of another, his promise is not within the statute."
See, also, numerous other cases to the same effect, cited in note 19, p. 899, § 470, of 1 Williston on Contracts.
In the case of Faulkner v. Crawford,
The case of Myers v. Dean,
Nor does it make any difference that, at the time Mitchell agreed to pay commission to Kennady, no specific amount was named. It is a maxim of law that id certum est quod certum reddi potest. It was held in Hales v. Peters (Tex. Civ. App.)
See, also, Lungerhausen v. Crittenden,
We should perhaps notice with a little more particularity an objection made in behalf of appellant to the statement in a deposition of one of the Ritcheys, to the effect that Mitchell said at the time the contract was negotiated between the Ritcheys and Mitchell that "he (Mitchell) would take care of Kennady." It was earnestly insisted that this should have been excluded, for the reason that it was not included in the written contract between the Ritcheys and Mitchell, the contention being that it violates the rule that parol testimony may not be received to contradict, vary, or supplement a written contract. The precise question was answered by our Supreme Court in the case of Johnson v. Elmen,
By proper bill of exception it is shown that, while appellant's counsel was reading the answer to the twelfth interrogatory propounded to one of the Ritcheys, as he reached the second line, and was proceeding to read the balance of said answer, "Nye was in California and he (Mitchell) had assumed his agreement," the court said: "Hold on; read that again where he said he assumed the contract." The bill further shows that in this same connection the court several times referred to this part of the witness' deposition, and it is strenuously objected that the court thereby gave the answer undue prominence, and it was a comment upon the weight of the evidence. Whatever force might, under other circumstances, be given to the objection thus urged, we think the assignment presenting it must be overruled.
It is abundantly shown by the evidence that at the time of the negotiations between the Ritcheys and Mitchell the Ritcheys made reference to commissions due Kennedy, and insisted upon Mitchell undertaking to pay them, to which Mitchell replied that he "would take care of Kennady." While Mitchell explains that by the use of that remark, which he admits he made, he meant that he would defeat Kennady's claim on the ground that it was nonenforceable, yet no such meaning or purpose was made known to the Ritcheys or Nye, and the expression, when read in the light of the circumstances, could have meant nothing less I than that he would satisfy the claim of Kennady for commissions, and Mitchell must have known that the Ritcheys so understood the statement. It would therefore be violative of sound principles of law to give effect to Mitchell's undisclosed purpose or interpretation of his promise. No injury, hence, is apparent because of the court's action in giving undue prominence to the statement of Ritchey in his deposition that Mitchell assumed the Nye contract.
We think all assignments of error must be overruled, and the Judgment affirmed.